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Innovative Remediation of PFAS Sites in Europe | EUTECH

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The remediation of PFAS-contaminated sites has become one of Europe’s most critical environmental engineering challenges. With thousands of known and suspected contaminated locations, evolving EU regulatory frameworks, and growing public health concerns, organisations are under increasing pressure to deliver remediation strategies that are reliable, compliant, and cost-effective.

Through its involvement in the SIERA Impact Webinar series – powered by SIERA contributes practical insights on how science-based remediation, lifecycle-driven planning, and regulatory alignment can transform PFAS liabilities into long-term environmental and economic opportunities.

The Growing Urgency of PFAS Remediation in Europe

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are often referred to as “forever chemicals” due to their persistence and mobility in the environment. Across Europe, their footprint is both widespread and deeply embedded in soils, groundwater, and surface waters:

  • More than 23,000 known or suspected PFAS-contaminated sites have been identified
  • Over 12.5 million people may draw water from potentially impacted sources
  • More than half of monitored rivers and up to one-third of lakes exceed safe PFOS thresholds
  • Less than 1% of identified sites have been fully remediated

Every delay in remediation allows plumes to expand, increases long-term operational and compliance costs, and compounds environmental and health risks. Proactive, well-designed intervention therefore remains essential.

Why PFAS-Impacted Sites Are So Challenging

1. Complex Environmental Behaviour

PFAS migrate easily across soils, aquifers, and surface waters and often originate from multiple overlapping sources. Stormwater, wastewater, landfill leachate, and industrial discharges continuously reintroduce contamination, creating persistent plumes that are difficult to fully contain. This results in expanding remediation footprints, longer project timelines, and sustained community exposure concerns.

2. Analytical and Monitoring Limitations

Detecting PFAS at environmentally relevant concentrations remains technically demanding. Variability in analytical methods, analyte panels, and detection limits creates uncertainty in baseline data and trend analysis. Many short-chain PFAS and precursor compounds are not consistently captured, masking total mass loading and complicating regulatory decision-making.

3. Treatment Performance and Residuals Management

PFAS remediation frequently requires extreme concentration reductions—sometimes by a factor of up to 100,000x—to meet regulatory targets in the low ng/L range. Technologies such as granular activated carbon, ion exchange, and membrane systems are highly sensitive to site chemistry and flow conditions. Spent media, concentrates, and sludges introduce additional permitting, disposal, and long-term liability considerations.

4. Regulatory Complexity Across the EU

PFAS regulation spans water, soil, waste, and liability frameworks that vary across jurisdictions. While harmonisation is progressing, differences in thresholds, reporting requirements, and enforcement timelines can extend permitting cycles and delay site closure if not addressed through robust planning and documentation.

EU Regulatory Landscape for PFAS Remediation

PFAS remediation in Europe is governed by an interconnected set of regulatory instruments, including:

  • Water Framework Directive – protection of rivers and groundwater
  • Drinking Water Directive – establishment of PFAS limits in potable supplies
  • Environmental Liability Directive – strict responsibility for preventing and remediating environmental damage
  • REACH Regulation – restriction of PFAS as substances of very high concern
  • Waste Framework and Landfill Directives – management of PFAS-contaminated materials
  • POPs Regulation – controls on manufacture, use, and disposal

Together, these regulations reinforce the polluter-pays principle and require remediation strategies that are technically defensible and auditable over the long term.

Turning Compliance into Opportunity

While PFAS remediation is often perceived as a regulatory burden, it also creates tangible opportunities for sustainable development and innovation.

Ecosystem Restoration and Resource Recovery

Effective remediation enables the safe reuse of PFAS-impacted land and water bodies. Former liabilities can be transformed into community assets such as green infrastructure, renewable energy installations, or low-risk commercial developments, delivering both environmental and social value.

Enhanced Monitoring and Risk Management

Early-warning monitoring networks and harmonized sampling protocols reduce uncertainty and prevent compliance exceedances. Data-driven analytics support proactive asset management, optimize operational expenditure, and improve regulator and community confidence.

Advanced Remediation Technologies and Circular Economy Growth

Integrated treatment trains, paired with qualified destruction pathways, reduce residual waste volumes and long-term liability. Lifecycle-oriented design lowers energy use, media replacement frequency, and logistics demands, supporting circular economy principles and local value creation.

Harmonised Regulation and Innovation Acceleration

Clear, science-based regulatory expectations shorten design-to-permit timelines and reduce disputes. Predictable frameworks attract investment in PFAS-free chemistries, advanced treatment technologies, and digital compliance tools.

Science-Driven Solutions for PFAS Remediation

Building on insights shared through the SIERA Impact Webinar seriespowered by SIERA applies an integrated, end-to-end remediation framework.

1. Site Assessment and Contamination Investigation

Comprehensive PFAS investigations identify sources, pathways, and plume dynamics across soil, groundwater, surface water, and infrastructure. High-resolution site characterisation and advanced analytics support the development of a robust conceptual site model.

2. Remediation Planning and Design

Remedial strategies integrate hydrogeology, PFAS chemistry, regulatory requirements, and lifecycle economics. Treatment train approaches combine capture technologies with validated destruction or disposal pathways, optimised through modelling and cost analysis.

3. Post-Remediation Monitoring and Reporting

Long-term monitoring verifies plume stability and performance reliability. Sentinel wells expanded PFAS analyte panels, and GIS-enabled reporting platforms support transparent compliance and adaptive management.

4. Risk Assessment and Management

Risk-based frameworks evaluate human and ecological exposure pathways, guiding containment, control, and communication strategies. Financial accountability is aligned with regulatory requirements under the Environmental Liability Directive.

Case Study Insight: Airport Groundwater Remediation

A complex PFAS-impacted airport site illustrates how phased remediation, hydraulic containment, and multi-stage activated carbon treatment can effectively manage groundwater plumes. Continuous monitoring and adaptive operation protected downstream users and the food chain, demonstrating the value of structured planning under challenging hydrogeological conditions.

Digital Compliance with SustainSuite

As part of the SIERA ecosystem, SustainSuite enhances PFAS remediation programs by enabling:

  • Automated compliance tracking aligned with EU regulations
  • Real-time monitoring, analytics, and impact measurement
  • AI-powered ESG and sustainability reporting

These capabilities support proactive decision-making while simplifying regulatory and stakeholder communication.

Conclusion: Engineering Resilient PFAS Solutions

PFAS contamination presents a long-term challenge that demands scientific rigour, regulatory clarity, and strategic execution. By combining advanced environmental engineering with digital compliance and lifecycle thinking, supports organization’s in delivering remediation solutions that are reliable, transparent, and future-ready.

This integrated approach reflects the shared commitment of SIERA member companies to Engineering for A Better Tomorrow.

Discover expert insights, technical guidance, and practical solutions through the SIERA Impact Webinar series.
To explore how PFAS remediation strategies can be tailored to your site and regulatory context, book a consultation with the experts of the SIERA Alliance.

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A Message from the Founder: Florian von Tucher

In the mid-2000s my involvement in development aid took me to some of the most remote and impoverished regions of the world. 

Northern Tibet, Mongolia, and Western China – where I was involved with the implementation of decentralised wastewater treatment systems, I realised I needed a deeper purpose. Though I later found success in real estate development, the desire to make a lasting impact never left me.  

A pivotal moment occurred when I was invited to Ghana by my friend and mentor, Cardinal Peter Turkson, who was the head of the Dicastery for the Promotion of Integral Human Development of the Catholic Church at the time. He has since been appointed the Pontifical Chancellor of the Academy of Sciences and the Pontifical Chancellor of Social Sciences.  

Cardinal Turkson had a profound influence on me. His invitation gave me the opportunity to witness firsthand the development needs of the country. We reflected on my experiences in China, and together, we envisioned a model of development that would take root in one community and gradually expand. We believed that small, strategic steps could lead to lasting transformation – just like the biblical parable of the mustard seed, which grows into something far greater than its humble beginnings. 

Cardinal Turkson’s steadfast belief in this vision and encouragement became the base upon which the Mustard Seed Foundation was built. His unwavering support, wisdom, and guidance helped shape not just the mission of the Foundation, but my personal journey as well. 

With the encouragement of the Cardinal and the Integral Human Development (IHD) office, we initially operated with the IHD before establishing the Mustard Seed Foundation as a stand-alone organisation in Germany. We have been fortunate to receive support from numerous European donors, a humble reminder that our mission is not just about individual efforts – it is about collective impact. 

Collaboration has been a cornerstone of our work. We have partnered with organisations like Caritas and Rotary International to extend our reach. One of our most impactful collaborations has been with M&P Group, who donate their engineering concepts, project supervision, and high-quality technical execution, allowing 100% of donor contributions to go into the projects themselves. 

One such initiative is the Clean Water Initiative, launched in partnership with M&P Group. In 2024, we completed a well in Ndoss, Senegal, significantly improving agricultural efficiency and empowering the local community. This project epitomises our commitment to sustainable solutions – starting with clean water and gradually building infrastructure that supports long-term development. 

Our work aligns closely with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), focusing on poverty alleviation, economic empowerment, environmental sustainability, and humanitarian aid. Our model is simple but effective: start with one project and expand, year by year, to create an ecosystem of support. A water well leads to a school, which leads to renewable energy solutions, which, in turn, fosters economic opportunities. Over time, these efforts cumulatively transform entire regions. 

The Mustard Seed Foundation is a testament to what can be achieved with nothing more than a vision, a strong commitment, and the faith of a mustard seed. Yet, none of this would have been possible without the belief and encouragement of Cardinal Peter Turkson. His unwavering faith in our mission gave me the courage to persevere through challenges and continue expanding our impact. As we continue our work, we remain driven by the belief that small beginnings can yield great outcomes, inspiring hope and lasting change in the communities we serve. His legacy of faith, vision, and commitment to human dignity is deeply woven into every initiative we undertake.